10,323 research outputs found
Cambrian Lattices
For an arbitrary finite Coxeter group W we define the family of Cambrian
lattices for W as quotients of the weak order on W with respect to certain
lattice congruences. We associate to each Cambrian lattice a complete fan,
which we conjecture is the normal fan of a polytope combinatorially isomorphic
to the generalized associahedron for W. In types A and B we obtain, by means of
a fiber-polytope construction, combinatorial realizations of the Cambrian
lattices in terms of triangulations and in terms of permutations. Using this
combinatorial information, we prove in types A and B that the Cambrian fans are
combinatorially isomorphic to the normal fans of the generalized associahedra
and that one of the Cambrian fans is linearly isomorphic to Fomin and
Zelevinsky's construction of the normal fan as a "cluster fan." Our
construction does not require a crystallographic Coxeter group and therefore
suggests a definition, at least on the level of cellular spheres, of a
generalized associahedron for any finite Coxeter group. The Tamari lattice is
one of the Cambrian lattices of type A, and two "Tamari" lattices in type B are
identified and characterized in terms of signed pattern avoidance. We also show
that open intervals in Cambrian lattices are either contractible or homotopy
equivalent to spheres.Comment: Revisions in exposition (partly in response to the suggestions of an
anonymous referee) including many new figures. Also, Conjecture 1.4 and
Theorem 1.5 are replaced by slightly more detailed statements. To appear in
Adv. Math. 37 pages, 8 figure
Generic rectangulations
A rectangulation is a tiling of a rectangle by a finite number of rectangles.
The rectangulation is called generic if no four of its rectangles share a
single corner. We initiate the enumeration of generic rectangulations up to
combinatorial equivalence by establishing an explicit bijection between generic
rectangulations and a set of permutations defined by a pattern-avoidance
condition analogous to the definition of the twisted Baxter permutations.Comment: Final version to appear in Eur. J. Combinatorics. Since v2, I became
aware of literature on generic rectangulations under the name rectangular
drawings. There are results on asymptotic enumeration and computations
counting generic rectangulations with n rectangles for many n. This result
answers an open question posed in the rectangular drawings literature. See
"Note added in proof.
Universal geometric cluster algebras
We consider, for each exchange matrix B, a category of geometric cluster
algebras over B and coefficient specializations between the cluster algebras.
The category also depends on an underlying ring R, usually the integers,
rationals, or reals. We broaden the definition of geometric cluster algebras
slightly over the usual definition and adjust the definition of coefficient
specializations accordingly. If the broader category admits a universal object,
the universal object is called the cluster algebra over B with universal
geometric coefficients, or the universal geometric cluster algebra over B.
Constructing universal coefficients is equivalent to finding an R-basis for B
(a "mutation-linear" analog of the usual linear-algebraic notion of a basis).
Polyhedral geometry plays a key role, through the mutation fan F_B, which we
suspect to be an important object beyond its role in constructing universal
geometric coefficients. We make the connection between F_B and g-vectors. We
construct universal geometric coefficients in rank 2 and in finite type and
discuss the construction in affine type.Comment: Final version to appear in Math. Z. 49 pages, 5 figure
Noncrossing partitions and the shard intersection order
We define a new lattice structure on the elements of a finite Coxeter group
W. This lattice, called the shard intersection order, is weaker than the weak
order and has the noncrossing partition lattice NC(W) as a sublattice. The new
construction of NC(W) yields a new proof that NC(W) is a lattice. The shard
intersection order is graded and its rank generating function is the W-Eulerian
polynomial. Many order-theoretic properties of the shard intersection order,
like Mobius number, number of maximal chains, etc., are exactly analogous to
the corresponding properties of NC(W). There is a natural dimension-preserving
bijection between simplices in the order complex of the shard intersection
order (i.e. chains in the shard intersection order) and simplices in a certain
pulling triangulation of the W-permutohedron. Restricting the bijection to the
order complex of NC(W) yields a bijection to simplices in a pulling
triangulation of the W-associahedron.
The shard intersection order is defined indirectly via the polyhedral
geometry of the reflecting hyperplanes of W. Indeed, most of the results of the
paper are proven in the more general setting of simplicial hyperplane
arrangements.Comment: 44 pages, 15 figure
A combinatorial approach to scattering diagrams
Scattering diagrams arose in the context of mirror symmetry, but a special
class of scattering diagrams (the cluster scattering diagrams) were recently
developed to prove key structural results on cluster algebras. We use the
connection to cluster algebras to calculate the function attached to the
limiting wall of a rank-2 cluster scattering diagram of affine type. In the
skew-symmetric rank-2 affine case, this recovers a formula due to Reineke. In
the same case, we show that the generating function for signed Narayana numbers
appears in a role analogous to a cluster variable. In acyclic finite type, we
construct cluster scattering diagrams of acyclic finite type from Cambrian fans
and sortable elements, with a simple direct proof.Comment: This is the second half of arXiv:1712.06968, which was originally
titled "Scattering diagrams and scattering fans". The contents of this paper
will be removed from arXiv:1712.06968, which will be re-titled "Scattering
fans." Version 2: Minor expository changes. (We thank some anonymous referees
for helpful comments.
Hong Kong – The new offence of fraud
Letter from Hong Kong by John Reading SC (Senior Assistant Director of Public Prosecutions, Commercial Crime Unit, Department of Justice, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region) describing how Hong Kong’s legislature enacted a statutory offence of fraud by inserting a new section (16A) in the Theft Ordinance. Jean reading prosecutes fraud and corruption cases and is a Senior Counsel. Published in the Letter from … section of Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
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